[Eugene Volokh] Short Circuit: A roundup of recent federal court decisions

The Volokh Conspiracy 2016-07-31

Summary:

(Here is the latest edition of the Institute for Justice’s weekly Short Circuit newsletter, written by John Ross.)

Justice Ginsburg recently expressed an unfavorable opinion of a presidential candidate, violating the norm that judges remain above the political fray. Is this particular norm really so essential? Evan Bernick of the Center for Judicial Engagement argues that it is. Read more here.

This week on the podcast: mugshots, visiting Facebook without permission, due process at parole hearings, and Planned Parenthood’s public funding.

The Federal Criminal Discovery Blue Book, a 500-page manual for prosecutors created after the botched prosecution of an Alaska Senator, is attorney work product, says the D.C. Circuit, and so exempt from public disclosure. But the full court should revisit the precedent that requires this outcome, say two judges, lest justice not be seen to be done.

After lengthy application process, coal company receives permit to strip mine West Virginia mountaintop. But four years later, the EPA revokes the permit citing environmental impacts that had been underestimated previously. Company: Relying on the permit, we spent millions of dollars bringing the project online. D.C. Circuit: The company forfeited any argument about its reliance costs by failing to make it earlier in the case. Dissent: The company did raise the argument, and it is decisive — completely ignoring such costs hardly makes for reasoned decision-making.

Allegation: Puerto Rican police officer declines to participate in compulsory on-duty prayer session, is demoted. First Circuit: The district court was right to deny qualified immunity to several supervisors.

Feds: Up to $1 billion in assets, including a Midtown Manhattan office tower, owned by a nonprofit (and a related entity) purporting to support the study of Iranian culture are in fact controlled by the Iranian government. So those assets are forfeit. Second Circuit: Could be the nonprofit didn’t know the related entity was controlled by Iran. We’ll need a trial to find out. Moreover, the search warrant investigators relied on to seize computers, servers, and a trove of documents was defective. Might be that evidence should be suppressed.

Over a thousand victims of terrorism who have obtained (unpaid) money judgments against the Iranian government wish to lay claim to the proceeds from the case above. Second Circuit: The district court needs to reconsider whether the Terrorism Risk Insurance Act of 2002 allows that (if indeed the property is forfeitable).

Philadelphia newspaper reports on then-emerging scandal, in which a paramedic alleged she had nonconsensual relations with firefighters and was paraded around a fire station naked on a leash. Accompanying the story, the paper publishes a photo of a fireman unconnected to the events in question, resulting in much humiliation for him. Third Circuit: The district court erred in dismissing his defamation and false-light claims.

Allegation: Private eye interviews burglary victim, is charged with witness intimidation based on bogus report from Cleveland detective who’s handling the case and, it turns out, sending sexually charged text messages to the victim — as well as victims in unrelated cases. (The detective is fired but reinstated by an arbitrator.) Sixth Circuit: The private eye’s malicious-prosecution and other claims were properly dismissed.

Man Googles himself, finds an entry in which his name appears frighteningly close to the words “indecency with a child.” He sues Google for $19.2 trillion. Sixth Circuit: You lose, but, on the plus side, all of the Google hits about your name now concern this litigation.

Attorneys buy copyrights to porn films, threaten to sue folks who downloaded illegally, and (relying on the accuseds’ reluctance to mount a public defense) offer to settle for a fee. District Court: It smacks of “bullying pretense.” Have some sanctions — and some more sanctions for emptying your bank accounts to avoid paying up and engaging in legal hijinks to cover your tracks.

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Authors:

Eugene Volokh

Date tagged:

07/31/2016, 07:22

Date published:

07/25/2016, 12:49